Shattered records livened up the already lively Northeast  Auctions’ Marine and China Trade sale this past weekend, August  20 and 21, as no fewer than four world record prices were  achieved during a single sultry summer afternoon.   The previously undocumented Fitz Henry Lane portrait of the bark  Eastern Star off Thatcher’s Island, Gloucester, a circa 1853 oil  on canvas, was the star of the day when it brought $913,500. The  24-by-36-inch ship portrait went to a Boston-area agent bidding  for a private collector and had come from the E. Norman  Flayderman collection. It had no visible signature.   As he offered the carved Bellamy eagle that brought a record  $666,000, auctioneer Ron Bourgeault said simply, “The best.”  Then, after he hammered it down, Bourgeault smiled and confided  to his audience, “For 50 years in the business, I’ve always  dreamed about getting the record [for a Bellamy].” The 48-inch  eagle bore a banner with the inscription “God is our refuge and  strength.” A Bellamy carved plaque with the banner “Don’t Give up  the Ship” was another record, this one for a plaque, at $165,500.   Two bidders slugged it out late in the sale for a small pair of  Chinese Export famille rose bottle-form vases with lotus blossoms  that they drove to a stunning $545,000. The vases carried a  modest estimate of $400/600. A Chinese Export porcelain covered  cider jug decorated on both sides with an American eagle was a  remarkable $127,000.   John Singleton Copley’s circa 1785 portrait of Benjamin Loring  was yet another record when it sold for $473,500. Loring, a  Loyalist from Boston, served as a physician in the Royal Navy  during the Revolutionary War.   A scrimshawed whale’s tooth carved with the image of a whale ship  and four whale boats harpooning five whales by the Pagoda  Albatross artist fetched a whopping $303,000. A second tooth,  with an image of the whaler Pacific by Nantucket carver Edward  Burdett, sold on the phone for $193,000. Both teeth came from the  families of the original owners.   A carved elm figurehead of a woman in a purple and blue dress  trimmed in gold came from the brig Martha and went for a  compelling $270,000 to the same agent that bought the Lane  painting. An English pine figurehead carved in the image of Lord  Palmerston in about 1820-1830 brought a substantial $204,000. A  full report of the sale will appear in a future edition.
 
    



 
						